Internship opportunities are available for undergraduate students to work with DREAM2 scientists at
NASA Goddard. Research projects include modeling lunar surface material defects and hydrogen
implantation, laboratory research into lunar chemistry, designing deep space Cubesat mission concepts,
and using Apollo data to characterize the lunar environment. Applications are due by March 1, 2015.
Internships run for 10 weeks, beginning in early June. Use the keyword "dream" to search for DREAM2
opportunities via the following link:

An overview of DREAM2 results was recently presented at NASA Headquarters by DREAM2 PI Bill Farrell. Examples of DREAM2's science
and exploration integration were shown, including recent work by the team on plasma-related differential charging of human systems
at the Moon and asteroids, interaction of an outgassing spacecraft to a nearby small airless body, and allowable astronaut days in
the space radiation environment.

DREAM2 academic partner University of California at Berkeley has undergraduate intern opportunities
to work on DREAM2 space environment projects at the Berkeley location. Application deadline is 2/15.
For more information, contact Andrew Poppe (poppe@ssl.berkeley.edu) and see

DREAM2's Rosemary Killen and colleague Joe Hahn reports on a periodic surge of calcium atoms in the
exosphere of Mercury as tracing back to impacts by meteor streams possibly associated with comet Encke.
The press release is found at:

Bill Farrell (DREAM2 PI) presented an overview of DREAM2.s modeling and research efforts to
students and faculty in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Howard University on
October 29. Lora Bleacher (Education Lead) also presented opportunities for students to
get involved in DREAM2 research via undergraduate internships and outreach. The abstract
and presentation can be found at http://physics1.howard.edu/news/news_seminars14.html.